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You see it all the time in anime or manga: During a comical scene, a character may express anger in a way that's meant to incite laughter from the audience.

In such cases, you can expect the character to have enlarged, distorted and oftentimes pupil-less eyes; fangs or otherwise distorted teeth in their mouth; and No Indoor Voice - angry waving of hands or over-the-top violence are optional descriptors. Usually invoked when another character says or does something extremely stupid.

Of course, when anger is displayed in more dramatic scenes, a person's anger will be portrayed (and drawn by the artist) in a much more realistic manner.

Also possible to pull off in live-action works, but also more difficult since the physical distortions aren't as readily evident as in works of animation.

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When listing examples, state which characters are most prone to this convention; if it's plot-relevant, note it as such. Western animated works which are inspired by Japanese animation conventions may also be included.

Examples:

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Anime and Manga

Happens frequently in One Piece, with even usually-serious characters like Roronoa Zoro not being immune. Among the Straw Hat crew, Nami, Sanji and Usopp are the three who most usually get this treatment in response to some outrageous or idiotic act committed by the others (though they themselves are often not much better). In fact, Nico Robin is the only crew member who doesn't show a Comical Angry Face at any time (she makes up for it by being a Comically SeriousDeadpan Snarker, however).

Brook, the newest Straw Hat member, never pulls the Comical Angry Face off either. On the other hand, he's a skeleton.

Kaoru Kamiya, Yahiko Myoujin, Sanosuke Sagara, and Misao Makimachi in Rurouni Kenshin frequently have moments of this among the main characters. This usually accompanies physical violence against the titular character, which is always played for laughs.

Interestingly, a flashback during the Kyoto arc shows that when he was still training under Seijuro Hiko, Kenshin himself had bouts of this during the argument that led to him leaving Hiko's tutelage.

Narusegawa Naru in Love Hina is that series' most frequent offender, accompanying her usual Tsundere tendencies. Poor Keitaro just can't catch a break around her (though it doesn't help that he's an Accidental Pervert).

Kuwabara in YuYu Hakusho has this expression a lot, often in response to Yusuke or Hiei provoking him (exacerbated by him being ugly). Keiko also has expressions like this, though not nearly so often and usually directed only at Yusuke.

Happens a lot in the Tenchi Muyo! series, usually from Ryoko and Ayeka whenever they have their spats.

In Bleach, the most frequent users of this trope are Kon, whenever he's inside his lion plushie form and is upset at some circumstance that makes him into a Butt-Monkey, or Ichigo and Rukia when they're annoying each other.

Any Tsundere-type character in Naruto will have this expression when their being upset is played for comedy. Sakura is one of the most readily-available examples; in her case, it's usually directed toward Naruto when he's done something particularly dumb or annoying.

In 3-gatsu no Lion, Nikaido's video-taped lecture to Rei induces one from the latter in Chapter 14, a noticeable change, even to others in-universe, from his usual calm or melancholic expressions.

Assassination Classroom: Nearly all of the students in Class 3-E get afflicted with this from time to time, often over each other's weirder quirks or the just plain crazy stuff Koro-sensei pulls. The teachers of 3-E get this way, too; even the usually even-tempered Karasuma◊.

Karasuma: She said she wouldn't tell anyone about my toupee! What the hell is up with that?!note Koro-sensei had impersonated Karasuma and made Nagisa's mother think Karasuma's hair is a toupee.

Toy Story 2: Immediately before leaping into a fight, Mr. Potato Head attempts to switch his normal eyes with his "angry eyes". Instead, he accidentally pops his extra shoes into his eye sockets.

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Film - Live Action

In the Full Metal Jacket scene in which the Drill Sergeant Nasty famously berates the main characters, Private Joker is asked to show his "war face". Said war face consists of the character comically screaming, looking more scared than angry.

In Mockingjay, during the invasion of the Capitol one rebel soldier is told by Katniss' camera crew to make an angry "badass" face as part of their propaganda video. They try to suppress their giggling at how phony it comes off looking. Then a bomb goes off and everybody's screaming for real.

Live Action TV

Done intentionally by The Master in Doctor Who. "I'm not making myself very clear. You see, 'funny' is like this *beaming smile*. 'Not funny' is like this *Deep, wide-eyed scowl*. And right now, I'm not like *happy*, I'm like *angry*".

In The Legend of Korra, we have Tenzin do this in response to Korra mentioning his mother. This has only happened once so far, however.

Actually, it was also used in a Book 1 scene (complete with fire and lightning strikes in the background) when Ikki tells Asami that Korra likes Mako. Later on in the same scene after Korra tells her to run along, Ikki makes this face as well along with growling and cat scratching.

A Running Gag in "Duck!" has Mandy being accused by her superiors of farting (when it was an Underworld duck Blowing a Raspberry) and making faces that look like they're about to explode.

In "Keeper of the Reaper" when Billy starts to get the upper hand over Mandy in the episode's trial, he gets cocky and points and pinches Mandy's face with his pointer finger, which could be best described as a screaming on the inside memetic face.

In Filmation's Ghostbusters, there is nothing funnier than a fully-enraged Prime Evil. Jake seems to bring this out in him the most.

Real Life

Alabama college student Jack Blankenship became an overnight sensation by sitting behind the backboard at NCAA playoff games, and waving around an oversized cutout of his own hilariously scowling face in order to distract his team's opponents during free throw attempts.

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